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07/13
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it is incredibly destructive both for the environment, the atmosphere, the communities living near the mountain top removal where they blow up entire mountains in west virginia and through appalachia. but we're seeing this trade-off of one form of pollution for another. one form of dirty energy for another. a lot of that has to do with the influence of the natural gas industry has on this administration. what we're asking the president to do is to please sit down and meet with the families in the film "gasland 2" that are emblematic of several families in the united states that are suffering at the hands of drilling in united states history domestically and to meet with the scientists and engineers featured in the film who explain the dark side of fracking. water contamination that is an inevitability that's happening all across the shale gas areas because the wells crack and leak and the industry knows they crack and leak and because of the issue brought up of methane being this super greenhouse gas that is being emitted all over the production. in the production fields, in the gas fi
it is incredibly destructive both for the environment, the atmosphere, the communities living near the mountain top removal where they blow up entire mountains in west virginia and through appalachia. but we're seeing this trade-off of one form of pollution for another. one form of dirty energy for another. a lot of that has to do with the influence of the natural gas industry has on this administration. what we're asking the president to do is to please sit down and meet with the families in...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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it is a different environment. it was the mistress of the chief job of the president is to persuade people. it is a lot harder to persuade people today than it was in richard nixon's time. nixons one reason why seems obsessed with the media and what they are saying about him. he knows how powerful an instrument they are for public office. guest is richard norton smith. we're looking at the nixon tapes 40 years after they become became public knowledge. we're airing these on c-span radio during the month of july. you can listen to the recordings anytime online at c-span.org. the next call is from california on the independent line. have a question -- when president johnson was in the white house, i think he was talking to senator dirksen. president johnson knew nixon's thele were messing with promising to get out of the war. if johnson would have brought up, the think it would be possible nixon would never have been president? host: appreciate the call. this is from another viewer about a secret plan. guest: the ide
it is a different environment. it was the mistress of the chief job of the president is to persuade people. it is a lot harder to persuade people today than it was in richard nixon's time. nixons one reason why seems obsessed with the media and what they are saying about him. he knows how powerful an instrument they are for public office. guest is richard norton smith. we're looking at the nixon tapes 40 years after they become became public knowledge. we're airing these on c-span radio during...
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somebody trying to prevent these monopolies from happening from happening and so that there is a fair environment so a free market can happen and so that the market isn't just one monopoly and then there are able to be multiple participants and and this case it's not even they're not even saying it's against the law to have a monopoly but even if there is a big company that is running very successful in grabbing a big share of the market that there are some regulations and there are some limitations set in place at least there are some rules just to make sure that there is a fair game and these are the laws that are in place that will send the let's talk about microsoft because over a decade ago the justice department launch a suit against microsoft it cost them hundreds of millions of dollars and unfortunately that marked a turning point in microsoft and from there some could say that it was their the beginning of their demise they weren't able to innovate anymore and it was just a big waste of money because who was the biggest competitor to microsoft to emerge it was google and it had nothing t
somebody trying to prevent these monopolies from happening from happening and so that there is a fair environment so a free market can happen and so that the market isn't just one monopoly and then there are able to be multiple participants and and this case it's not even they're not even saying it's against the law to have a monopoly but even if there is a big company that is running very successful in grabbing a big share of the market that there are some regulations and there are some...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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and our entire environment here. even the people that have talked on your show the last couple of days, all the shows, by and large, the african-americans will tell you that it looks like it should be a guilty verdict, with very few exceptions. >> and whites are the other way. >> it's crazy. >> thank you, lisa bloom, paul henderson, tad nelson and karen de soto. that's "hardball" for now. thanks for being was. "politicsnation" with al sharpton starts right now. >> thanks, michael, and thanks to you for tuning in. tonight's lead, verdict watch in the george zimmerman trial. the jury's decision could come down at literally any moment. these are live pictures from the seminole county courthouse in sanford, florida, where jurors have been shut away in the jury room, deliberating for about three and a half hours now. by this point, they probably selected their foreman and are reviewing the evidence. after 12 days of testimony and 53 witnesses, these six
and our entire environment here. even the people that have talked on your show the last couple of days, all the shows, by and large, the african-americans will tell you that it looks like it should be a guilty verdict, with very few exceptions. >> and whites are the other way. >> it's crazy. >> thank you, lisa bloom, paul henderson, tad nelson and karen de soto. that's "hardball" for now. thanks for being was. "politicsnation" with al sharpton starts right...
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a you trying to prevent these monopolies from happening from happening and so that there is a fair environment so a free market can happen and so that the market isn't just one monopoly and then there are able to be multiple participants and and this case it's not even they're not even saying it's against the law to have a monopoly but even if there is a big company that is running very successful in grabbing a big share of the market that there are some regulations and there are some limitations set in place at least there are some rules just to make sure that there is a fair game and these are the laws that are in place that will send the let's talk about microsoft because over a decade ago the justice department launched an antitrust suit against microsoft it cost them hundreds of millions of dollars and unfortunately that marked a turning point in microsoft and from there some could say that it was their the beginning of their demise they weren't able to innovate anymore it was just a big waste of money because who was the biggest competitor to microsoft to emerge it was google and it had
a you trying to prevent these monopolies from happening from happening and so that there is a fair environment so a free market can happen and so that the market isn't just one monopoly and then there are able to be multiple participants and and this case it's not even they're not even saying it's against the law to have a monopoly but even if there is a big company that is running very successful in grabbing a big share of the market that there are some regulations and there are some...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 9, 2013
07/13
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minimize visual clutter in the streetscape environment. and there are a few strategies that it discusses in order to achieve this. the first is to minimize unwanted or not unnecessary elements. so, think about what we're putting out on the streetscape, whether it's necessary, whether there are other places it could go like on private parcels, and really being conscious about what we put out there. the second would be to consolidate or share different elements as possible. this could mean utility [speaker not understood], it could mean street lights, it could mean street tree guards that double as bike racks or anything like that, sort of capote atev i have thinking about how elements can serve more than one purpose. and the last and perhaps most important is when placing the elements we should be considering the overall streetscape design including what's out there in the existing condition, but also what might be there in the future. for example, opportunities for planting street trees. and this is usually best, most achievable by when we
minimize visual clutter in the streetscape environment. and there are a few strategies that it discusses in order to achieve this. the first is to minimize unwanted or not unnecessary elements. so, think about what we're putting out on the streetscape, whether it's necessary, whether there are other places it could go like on private parcels, and really being conscious about what we put out there. the second would be to consolidate or share different elements as possible. this could mean...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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. >> we must of this massive destruction to the environment. another trading commodity gets the mainative as rivers start disappearing. >> so much so that land is disappearing fast. he has eight children and has been making charcoal for more than 80 years. he digs up peat and sets it on fire. opportunitiesew here. charcoal is the only way that i can freak -- feed my family. >> that are trying to cut off funding to al-shabbab fighters. this is a resource that is yet to be interrupted. >> there is a dollar tax for every bag of charcoal, and they get $440 -- >>. >> we found evidence that charcoal is still shipped out. the local government here has called for a temporary lifting of the band, to illegally export their current charcoal. they say is too late to save the trees that have already been cut down. al jazeera, somalia. >> hello, a warm welcome to "the journal" on dw. these are the headlines this hour. the united states increases pressure on russia as edward snowden says he wants temporary asylum there. officials blame the devastating train c
. >> we must of this massive destruction to the environment. another trading commodity gets the mainative as rivers start disappearing. >> so much so that land is disappearing fast. he has eight children and has been making charcoal for more than 80 years. he digs up peat and sets it on fire. opportunitiesew here. charcoal is the only way that i can freak -- feed my family. >> that are trying to cut off funding to al-shabbab fighters. this is a resource that is yet to be...
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Jul 7, 2013
07/13
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we can find a way that is good for the environment and good for business. it is good for our planet and bottom-line. when it is missing we tried some product. yet to search to find those intersections. it is an intersection that benefits our customers and shareholders. when you can find that it really works. >> you are one of the mayors challenge which was an incentivized competition. this is one way of having share prosperity. -- came up with what >> if you look at the bashan -- basic functions of these have to provide, is there a way to provide this in a completely new way. you have to do something with the trash. we have decided that we will that endthe trash out up in the dump. we depend on individuals to make that choice. technology is there. it has not been applied to this skill. want to see if we can prove it. benefit to thee process? this is what started as thinking in this direction. we have been kicking it for a long time. we had a lots of ideas. we said we achieve all these other ones. let's put one out where we do not know whether we can do it.
we can find a way that is good for the environment and good for business. it is good for our planet and bottom-line. when it is missing we tried some product. yet to search to find those intersections. it is an intersection that benefits our customers and shareholders. when you can find that it really works. >> you are one of the mayors challenge which was an incentivized competition. this is one way of having share prosperity. -- came up with what >> if you look at the bashan --...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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but i've never been in an environment like this where you just were overpowered with a sense of death, you know. we knew we were walking in a place where lots of people had died. >> today the death penalty is outlawed in serbia. and the final execution in this chamber occurred in 1989. back aboveground, our crew discovered sights that compared to american prisons were at once familiar and foreign. >> the first thing that jumped out at me and the crew was the fact that all the inmates seemed to be wearing personal clothes. no prison issue uniforms whatsoever. that was a little jarring. the staff kind of going along the lines of the militaristic style, they were all in very distinct uniforms. the staff members would encounter each other. they would stop, salute and shake hands. each and every time. there was this military formality about how they greeted each other throughout the day. >> one of the things that stood out to me in this facility was all the inmates that smoke. it's everywhere. everybody is smoking. most prisons in the u.s. having very tight designated smoking areas, or eli
but i've never been in an environment like this where you just were overpowered with a sense of death, you know. we knew we were walking in a place where lots of people had died. >> today the death penalty is outlawed in serbia. and the final execution in this chamber occurred in 1989. back aboveground, our crew discovered sights that compared to american prisons were at once familiar and foreign. >> the first thing that jumped out at me and the crew was the fact that all the...
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Jul 10, 2013
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the less secure in the environment, the smaller the project. the more secure, the more substantial you can pursue. >> to follow up on that, in iraq, you have the assessments being done both about security and about engagement. , thoseabsence of usoco assessments were being done by our ambassador and those assessments were being done by the generals on the ground. where are they on this proposal? did the generals or the ambassadors feel that they would have benefited by having this? >> he supports the idea of having it. >> when the u.s. is operating overseas, the ambassador in iraq and with the u.s. operates elsewhere, it is ambassador who heads the effort in the country. the commanding general heads the defense operations. i understand what was said. where would it fit in this command? >> the mission is discrete and will to find. clarity will provide certainty to both agencies and the contractors. it would be somewhat like fema. its mission is to oversee the relief or reconstruction activity in the affected country. the president would declare
the less secure in the environment, the smaller the project. the more secure, the more substantial you can pursue. >> to follow up on that, in iraq, you have the assessments being done both about security and about engagement. , thoseabsence of usoco assessments were being done by our ambassador and those assessments were being done by the generals on the ground. where are they on this proposal? did the generals or the ambassadors feel that they would have benefited by having this?...
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Jul 9, 2013
07/13
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tavis: in this environment? from the lyrical standpoint? wise,e set up, age demographics, yes. the reason why is because together, we are phenomenal. 95% of those songs, we wrote most of those together. those are reflection of who we were and what we felt was going on at the time. i believe that we would still do it. >> we would never come from a misogynist to point of view or advocate violence. their goal your sales. that's what i'm asking -- >> people want to have a good time. if it sounds good and feels good. live, socialore to relevance. >> i think that we would segway because we sound good and we know how to write songs and put it out there. tavis: you are a businessman. music --away from the >> i went into direct marketing and was extremely successful. it was my saving grace that helped me go to the process of what happened as a kid. that is the foundation of what i've got. i learned about business and management. fortunately, i was able to go through my life. the artistink of formerly known as prince, back in the day, you guys are formally the sugar hill gang. q. you hav
tavis: in this environment? from the lyrical standpoint? wise,e set up, age demographics, yes. the reason why is because together, we are phenomenal. 95% of those songs, we wrote most of those together. those are reflection of who we were and what we felt was going on at the time. i believe that we would still do it. >> we would never come from a misogynist to point of view or advocate violence. their goal your sales. that's what i'm asking -- >> people want to have a good time. if...
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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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FBC
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john: you could be sued for the hostile environment. >> in the study for american asciation of colleges only 30 percent of college seniors agree with the state it is safe to hold unpopular opinions on campus. on 17 percent of professors agrees to matt that defeats the purse of higher education. john: which is debate. >> harvard has a civility pledge. >> we should be settled that you have to agree to hold civility and inclusiveness and kindness on the same level of intellectual attainment. it is dishones the idea that the most you the institution says now we are inclusive? what ever. and so we'll just hosted at what they need to believe? why n't we shutdown the univerty if we have decided moral philosophy. john: the country was founded by peopleho were in polite. >> very rude. >> one udt journalist wrote to coaches on other campuses about the hockey coach and he wrote at the end. john: just tried to give informion to write a paper. >> toe need to say anything just to be nice and he got a spon from cornell saying this is sggesting that if there is anything nice that could be setting is of
john: you could be sued for the hostile environment. >> in the study for american asciation of colleges only 30 percent of college seniors agree with the state it is safe to hold unpopular opinions on campus. on 17 percent of professors agrees to matt that defeats the purse of higher education. john: which is debate. >> harvard has a civility pledge. >> we should be settled that you have to agree to hold civility and inclusiveness and kindness on the same level of intellectual...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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. >> (translated): most of those areas with different faiths have been incubating environments for groups who have an extremist ideology. it was a plan. weapons were brought in a long time ago. it was all planned. the lads here had been preparing in case the village was attacked. >> narrator: in may last year, as violence spread across syria, fighting finally broke out between the alawites of aziziya and their sunni neighbors. >> (translated): we were with some young men, not many of us. the attackers were in the hundreds, about 700 gunmen. >> narrator: mohammed mahmoud is part of an alawite militia that protects the village. >> (translated): as the attack intensified and the number of the terrorists increased, we retreated. so they came in here and burned everything. you can see the fire damage. >> narrator: he's convinced that his sunni neighbors have been infiltrated by terrorists with extreme religious beliefs. >> (translated): they are planning to wipe us out. they don't even think of us as humans. in their books they call our sect the "akbiya." the "akbiya" are insects that should l
. >> (translated): most of those areas with different faiths have been incubating environments for groups who have an extremist ideology. it was a plan. weapons were brought in a long time ago. it was all planned. the lads here had been preparing in case the village was attacked. >> narrator: in may last year, as violence spread across syria, fighting finally broke out between the alawites of aziziya and their sunni neighbors. >> (translated): we were with some young men, not...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 9, 2013
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have 100 people we feed on a daily basis and [inaudible] some barely walk and in wheelchairs and safe environment for them. we help them with clothing. we help them with shower information. we counsel things that really need you guys' help on and without the help from the city we won't be able to stay open. guys look forward -- everyday, monday through friday and get a nutritious meal and do stuff and we show them love and i appreciate if you all can really, really, really put in your hearts to keep us -- to keep this funding going on for these guys because they really need it. thank you all. >> thank you. >> hi i am edmund larry and want to show you a couple of fliers and what is coming up this sunday at the african-american complex banking on health and journey from green wood about the black wallstreet and then on monday the 24th the san francisco international faith council is having a talk on racial profiling in the 21st century. prolaris society. you can call the san francisco international faith community, but being here today something i heard a lot about being young, gay, old, gay, black
have 100 people we feed on a daily basis and [inaudible] some barely walk and in wheelchairs and safe environment for them. we help them with clothing. we help them with shower information. we counsel things that really need you guys' help on and without the help from the city we won't be able to stay open. guys look forward -- everyday, monday through friday and get a nutritious meal and do stuff and we show them love and i appreciate if you all can really, really, really put in your hearts to...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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the large banks have a lot of regulatory issues, the regionals benefit from a rising rate environment, as long as it's not rapid rising rates and increased demands for loans. those are areas that will start doing better. >> so you're assuming the economy's getting better. i'm not so sure. if the economy is getting better, though how does the fed chief come up and make the comments they made? there's some disconnect between a country that needs the continued fed stimulus against the backdrop where people say the economy's getting better. i'm missing something clearly. >> it's my sense that the market's very jittery about the fed backing off. the fed almost sent out a trial balloon and realized this would be a very big carry trade. people too exposed to the bond market. and i think they're going to wait and be more gradual and subtle about taking away the money they've been putting into the market through quantitative easing. but the economy is strengthening. you're seeing it in the employment trends. it's not a robust enormous recovery, but it's gradual and going in the right direction
the large banks have a lot of regulatory issues, the regionals benefit from a rising rate environment, as long as it's not rapid rising rates and increased demands for loans. those are areas that will start doing better. >> so you're assuming the economy's getting better. i'm not so sure. if the economy is getting better, though how does the fed chief come up and make the comments they made? there's some disconnect between a country that needs the continued fed stimulus against the...
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john: you could be sued for th hostile environment. >> in the study for american association of colleges only 30 percent of college seniors agree with the state it is safe to hold unpopular opinions on campus. only 17 percent of professors agrees to matt that defeats the purpose of higher education. john: which is debate. >> harvard has a civility pledge. >> we should be settled that you have to agree to hold civility and inclusiveness and kindness on the same level of intellectual attainment. it is dishonest the idea that the most you the institution says now we are inclusive? what ever. and so we'll just hosted at what they need to believe? why don't we shutdown the university if we have decided moral philosophy. john: the country was founded by people who were in polite. >> very rude. >> one student journalist wrote to coaches on other campuses about the hockey coach and he wrote at the end. john: just tried to give information to write a paper. >> toe need to say anything just to be nice and he got a response from cornell saying this is suggesting that if there is anything nice that
john: you could be sued for th hostile environment. >> in the study for american association of colleges only 30 percent of college seniors agree with the state it is safe to hold unpopular opinions on campus. only 17 percent of professors agrees to matt that defeats the purpose of higher education. john: which is debate. >> harvard has a civility pledge. >> we should be settled that you have to agree to hold civility and inclusiveness and kindness on the same level of...
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Jul 9, 2013
07/13
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WETA
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tavis: in this environment? from the lyrical standpoint? wise,e set up, age demographics, yes. the reason why is because together, we are phenomenal. 95% of those songs, we wrote most of those together. those are reflection of who we were and what we felt was going on at the time. i believe that we would still do it. >> we would never come from a misogynist to point of view or advocate violence. their goal your sales. that's what i'm asking -- >> people want to have a good time. if it sounds good and feels good. live, socialore to relevance. >> i think that we would segway because we sound good and
tavis: in this environment? from the lyrical standpoint? wise,e set up, age demographics, yes. the reason why is because together, we are phenomenal. 95% of those songs, we wrote most of those together. those are reflection of who we were and what we felt was going on at the time. i believe that we would still do it. >> we would never come from a misogynist to point of view or advocate violence. their goal your sales. that's what i'm asking -- >> people want to have a good time. if...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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zero lower bound and, i hope, you know, at a reasonable period of time we'll be in a more monetary environment. >> on that international theme, you talked about the tripartheid roles of macroprudential regulation, lender of last resort and we look around the globe, the regulatory policies are in some cases done by an organization which is not the central bank. do you see there as being a strong case for bringing that role inside the central bank, or can you see circumstances in which it works to have the macro prudential part in a distinct organization? >> well, different, different countries have different kinds of financial structures as jean claude was saying, europe and the u.s. are different in many ways, etc. but as you look around the world, the trend now, of course, is for financial regulatory activities, financial oversight activities to move back into central banks. i mean, that's happening in europe, that's happening in the u.k., it's happening in the united states. and i think there's good reason for that. one very simple reason is that central banks tend to have the kind of expert
zero lower bound and, i hope, you know, at a reasonable period of time we'll be in a more monetary environment. >> on that international theme, you talked about the tripartheid roles of macroprudential regulation, lender of last resort and we look around the globe, the regulatory policies are in some cases done by an organization which is not the central bank. do you see there as being a strong case for bringing that role inside the central bank, or can you see circumstances in which it...
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it's controversial but britain's environment secretary says that the public should embrace genetically modified food is a hard sell the campaign is say it's dangerous to human health whereas the scientific community supports the technology and if it is a safe as they and the government are sure it is and the argument for g.m. food is quite compelling it would allow farmers to grow crops in tough conditions and thus help to feed hungry mouths around the world the u.s. and brazil already must have produces of the stuff and the british government says the u.k. shouldn't be getting left behind to talk more about this i'm joined by dr robert he's the founder for the alliance for natural health which campaigns against g.m. foods. there are a billion hungry mouths in the world and we're being told that this technology is safe shouldn't we embrace it in that case well if you look at all the real developments in raising eels it hasn't actually occurred through g.m. it's occurred through conventional breeding practices and we know that the european authorities have probably one of the most compr
it's controversial but britain's environment secretary says that the public should embrace genetically modified food is a hard sell the campaign is say it's dangerous to human health whereas the scientific community supports the technology and if it is a safe as they and the government are sure it is and the argument for g.m. food is quite compelling it would allow farmers to grow crops in tough conditions and thus help to feed hungry mouths around the world the u.s. and brazil already must...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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. >> the california puc does have rules in regard to marketing in a cca environment. i'm not aware that the puc has conducted an investigation and inquired about the puc's role and campaign or any other behind-the-scenes or open activities. >> it seems like there is a great deal where now this past week my daughter was actually looking at a youtube video justin beeber and there came up shell shock. i was stunned to see it and surprised that it was not being done with pg & e and collaboration between the two. i know a lot of people feel that way. the puc, isn't that their role to look at that? >> it might be. i think that c puc would probably look at others to ask for some kind of inquiry. we haven't asked for that kind of inquiry. >> okay. just for the record, my daughter does like justin beeber. >> i'm more of a joanie mitchell fan. >> okay. commissioner mar? >> can you talk a little bit about the green tariff that pg & e is subsidizing the rate and it's competitive. can you talk about that? >> yes, the san francisco is that it supports the tariff to offer to custome
. >> the california puc does have rules in regard to marketing in a cca environment. i'm not aware that the puc has conducted an investigation and inquired about the puc's role and campaign or any other behind-the-scenes or open activities. >> it seems like there is a great deal where now this past week my daughter was actually looking at a youtube video justin beeber and there came up shell shock. i was stunned to see it and surprised that it was not being done with pg & e and...
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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around with this motto don't the evil and as i said everybody is pretty much uncompromising in this environment and the truth is we all have to exist together and if we don't it is going to threaten everybody's existence. it is enter depended ecology. you can't have libraries without authors. google, whatever it wants to do in sampling copyrighted work, they're going to run out of it eventually view don't have more people writing books. so it ought to be a cooperative venture. to some extent there are people who actually come in and intervene and make this more difficult. the antitrust division of the justice department for example, we settle a big lawsuit with google. the antitrust division comes in and says we don't like it because all the little tiny corner of the market google will have a monopoly. not wrong but a public benefit of getting the content of several major university libraries available to people around the world, many fleas through public library terminals, seems to overwhelm this minor concern of the justice department objective. and that is typical of what seems to be happeni
around with this motto don't the evil and as i said everybody is pretty much uncompromising in this environment and the truth is we all have to exist together and if we don't it is going to threaten everybody's existence. it is enter depended ecology. you can't have libraries without authors. google, whatever it wants to do in sampling copyrighted work, they're going to run out of it eventually view don't have more people writing books. so it ought to be a cooperative venture. to some extent...
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Jul 8, 2013
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not right.just like myself are born in the southern environment, grew up in southern people, knew feelings. knew about the civil war and all thought, my , i goodness, we ought to get ahead curb, really. not have the law force us to do those ought to take down signs. that is what made me came to the conclusion, if i had though do over again, i would vote against that. >> done work with the robert byrd. board of directors in the byrd center. shepherdstown. >> yeah, raymond stock. >> what did you think of that answer? 1982, senator byrd lost his grandson, 16-year-old an michael moore in automobile accident. he was delivering papers early in the morning. robably the most devastating, without question, the most devastating event in senator byrd's life. going to the minority. minority leader. very unhappy period. he thought his life, his contributions, where he wanted to go. will be his legacy? >> i think it will be a significant legacy when i -- book is filled with robert byrd. ends with robert byrd, with robert byrd. i didn't see any way to do that. focus to the senate as an institution in the
not right.just like myself are born in the southern environment, grew up in southern people, knew feelings. knew about the civil war and all thought, my , i goodness, we ought to get ahead curb, really. not have the law force us to do those ought to take down signs. that is what made me came to the conclusion, if i had though do over again, i would vote against that. >> done work with the robert byrd. board of directors in the byrd center. shepherdstown. >> yeah, raymond stock....
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Jul 6, 2013
07/13
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it's a rest day for man and fwod's environment is rest day for the earth. host: steven, thanks for your call. remember the question posted his morning, facebook.com/ cspan. we'll continue about the economy. we're going to hear from the economics correspondent for reuters. we'll look ago the jobs figures and more broadly at the economy. later on, shane goldmacher, the congressional correspondent for national journal. his recent story looks at how some members of congress draw government pensions for previous work in addition to their congressional salaries, a practice known as double dipping. as fit tv and american history tv continue our tour of american cities, this weekend will foe tour bakersfield, california, all weekend long much it's located about 80 miles north of coming up today on book tv, we'll show you all of our programming we gather there, including a look at the story of african-americans who migrated to rural california during the dust bowl years. >> as part of this migration of blacks who did something that no blacks in america -- kind of we
it's a rest day for man and fwod's environment is rest day for the earth. host: steven, thanks for your call. remember the question posted his morning, facebook.com/ cspan. we'll continue about the economy. we're going to hear from the economics correspondent for reuters. we'll look ago the jobs figures and more broadly at the economy. later on, shane goldmacher, the congressional correspondent for national journal. his recent story looks at how some members of congress draw government pensions...
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beginning of a secular bear market in bonds and so the second question is will this rising interest rate environment complicate an already complicated situation in greece yanis. well you will question is quite separate from your premise. and your question is much more broad and it's not doesn't just but again to greece i think that we are probably going to have to see a very low liquidity and upper level interest rates for a long wired to go because these global crisis is creating a dearth of aggregate demand worldwide so i'm not particularly wired about the increase in interest rates i know that this is a talk in the united states with the better one gets of announcing that he is pulling the plug from to eat but they've got to be a premise max we've got to agree whether it was a levered buyout or not i wish it where i wish there was a conspiracy there was no conspiracy made it was estimates spontaneous disorder was happening in the years up before and let it be fed up and they're oh my no personally he came in in two thousand and nine after the colby's us that had already happened and he was crimin
beginning of a secular bear market in bonds and so the second question is will this rising interest rate environment complicate an already complicated situation in greece yanis. well you will question is quite separate from your premise. and your question is much more broad and it's not doesn't just but again to greece i think that we are probably going to have to see a very low liquidity and upper level interest rates for a long wired to go because these global crisis is creating a dearth of...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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we, like myself were born in a southern environment, grew up as southern people, knew their feelings about the civil war and all of these things. i thought my goodness, we ought to get ahead of the curve really. not have the law force used to it, well take down those signs. that is what made me come to the conclusion if i had to do it over again, i will vote against that law. >> you done some work with robert byrd? >> yes, on the board of directors. >> you have in jefferstown? >> that's right. >> what do you think of that answer? >> oh. in 1982, senator byrd lost his grandson, 16-year-old john-michael moore in an automobile accident. he was delivering papers early in the morning. probably the most devastating event in senator byrd's life. it was a very unhappy period. it caused him to rethink his life and contributions and where he wanted to go. >> what will be his legacy. >> it will be a significant legacy. it starts with robert byrd and ends with robert byrd. i different see any other way to do that. he really bring focus to the senate as an institution. he was interested in the ma
we, like myself were born in a southern environment, grew up as southern people, knew their feelings about the civil war and all of these things. i thought my goodness, we ought to get ahead of the curve really. not have the law force used to it, well take down those signs. that is what made me come to the conclusion if i had to do it over again, i will vote against that law. >> you done some work with robert byrd? >> yes, on the board of directors. >> you have in jefferstown?...
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rising because you didn't have any vigilantes it was too expensive to be a vigilante in that sort of environment anonymous analytics as a hedge fund i really think that they could do fantastically well i hope it made contact me because i think i could raise ten or twenty billion dollars for this fund overseas you know it can really do a number i want to then move on to what what this has caused that america is that you have the vigilantes coming in to save america but not fast enough because there are one hundred sixty million full time workers in the u.s. versus one hundred twenty two million before the great recession so nineteen percent of the workforce is now part time before the recession was seventeen percent now related to the bond market you know the world took the latest jobs numbers from america as a boom as that things are getting better but in fact full time jobs are declining people are only working part time in these gulags that are listed on the stock exchange with c. x w r c ca like the u.s. bond markets being sold off by foreign creditors and by hedge funds as well and there's a
rising because you didn't have any vigilantes it was too expensive to be a vigilante in that sort of environment anonymous analytics as a hedge fund i really think that they could do fantastically well i hope it made contact me because i think i could raise ten or twenty billion dollars for this fund overseas you know it can really do a number i want to then move on to what what this has caused that america is that you have the vigilantes coming in to save america but not fast enough because...
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international investors have pulled out and sold their assets the safest decision in a repartee deteriorating environment for the foreseeable future it looks like egypt will have a government that again is unable to as to policy and as a result unable to provide investors with the confidence that they were going to begin to sing it but here in tokyo square protesters are not sorry the western giants on leaving just most how much i want that i wore a helmet this car leasing businessmen tells us he's fed up. before morsi was ousted . we're begging for the i.m.f. loan of about four point seven billion dollars a year now we don't want it we're all as business men collectively decided to support the egyptian economy and one day we collected over fifteen billion dollars in donations were a large economy we can rely on ourselves but the facts tell a different story for each day these demonstrations continue the egyptian economy is forced to cough up another one billion dollars the ripple effect is more insecurity in an already unstable region if there's anyone benefiting from these revolutions it's people right
international investors have pulled out and sold their assets the safest decision in a repartee deteriorating environment for the foreseeable future it looks like egypt will have a government that again is unable to as to policy and as a result unable to provide investors with the confidence that they were going to begin to sing it but here in tokyo square protesters are not sorry the western giants on leaving just most how much i want that i wore a helmet this car leasing businessmen tells us...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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the first of which is safety and the second is funding in the current fiscal environment. i would caution us because if dwight eisenhower or president kennedy had thought about the funding priorities in getting to the moon, they would have said no. but they did not. they said yes. and they were ok not to even live to see that accomplished. our challenge has to be the same. if we commit today to reach mars by 2030, we will have more than a 15-year funding profile for planning and development to be the challenges of accomplishing a complex mission. if you think about that kindergartner today, that means that within that child's lifetime, that child will get to experience what some of us, what i experienced when we did apollo and gemini and saturn. a 15-year funding window. the major scientific challenge will be to understand the impact of deep-space missions on humans. not only will astronauts travel for long times in compact space, but during space travel, astronauts will experience dangerous cosmic rays resulting in high levels of radiation. with our current technology, it
the first of which is safety and the second is funding in the current fiscal environment. i would caution us because if dwight eisenhower or president kennedy had thought about the funding priorities in getting to the moon, they would have said no. but they did not. they said yes. and they were ok not to even live to see that accomplished. our challenge has to be the same. if we commit today to reach mars by 2030, we will have more than a 15-year funding profile for planning and development to...
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Jul 10, 2013
07/13
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i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. >>> last night we told you about reported abuses at california state prisons including the illegal sterilization of female inmates and years of solitary confinement for inmates at pelican bay. today, we learned that an estimated 30,000 prison inmates began refusing meals in the largest prison protest in state history. that protest is part of a coordinated effort across the california prison system to end indefinite solitary confinement. state correction officials will not recognize the protest as a hunger strike until inmates have missed nine consecutive meals. we will continue to follow this story as it develops. on everything from home repair to healthcare written by people just like you. no company can pay to be on angie's list, so you can trust what you're reading. angie's list is like having thousands of close neighbors, where i can go ask for personal recommendations. that's the idea. before you have any work done, check angie's list. find out why more than two million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- revi
i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. >>> last night we told you about reported abuses at california state prisons including the illegal sterilization of female inmates and years of solitary confinement for inmates at pelican bay. today, we learned that an estimated 30,000 prison inmates began refusing meals in the largest prison protest in state history. that protest is part of a coordinated effort across the california prison system to end indefinite solitary...
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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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she oil companies say it's all reout the environment. what do you say it's about? >> i say it's about saving money. if it's going to cost them more money to make a reef, they won't do it. they're only doing it because ree saving them money. that's the bottom line. >> reporter: it would cost john hoffman about $3 million to remove this rig, money he'd rather put into a trust fund to preserve the reef. >> it's a wonderful ocean of mystery and intrigue associated with the ecosystems. >> reporter: the b.p. disaster and other spills earned these platforms a reputation for harm. now they are showing their other side: underwater worlds brimming eth life. chip reid, cbs news, off the coast of louisiana. >> pelley: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. a closed captioning is proudly sponsored by citracal. a calcium chew this decadent and sugar free? new citracal sugar-free chocolate chews. giving you calcium plus "d" in a tasty little package. captioning sponsored by cbs captione media access group at wgbh
she oil companies say it's all reout the environment. what do you say it's about? >> i say it's about saving money. if it's going to cost them more money to make a reef, they won't do it. they're only doing it because ree saving them money. that's the bottom line. >> reporter: it would cost john hoffman about $3 million to remove this rig, money he'd rather put into a trust fund to preserve the reef. >> it's a wonderful ocean of mystery and intrigue associated with the...